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Transcript
Colonizing
America 1519–1733
Why It Matters
Spanish, French, and English colonists came to North America. The colonies they founded often
reflected the values and traditions of their homelands. These values and traditions helped shape
core beliefs that most Americans share today.
The Impact Today
Several developments of the early colonial period are evident in the nation today.
• The language and culture of the southwestern United States reflect the influence of the
early Spanish settlers.
• Religious conflicts convinced the colonists of the importance of toleration and freedom of
religion, values important to Americans today.
• The democratic traditions and institutions of the modern United States originated during
colonial times.
The American Vision Video The Chapter 2 video,
“Early Explorers,” chronicles the voyages of some of the
early European explorers.
1519
• Cortés arrives on
the Mexican coast
1609–1610
• Santa Fe founded
1526
• Pizarro encounters
the Inca in Peru
▲
▲
▲▲
1500
1550
▼
48
1608
• Champlain founds
Quebec
1517
• Protestant
Reformation
begins
▼
1527
• Henry VIII breaks
with Catholic Church
1600
▼
1588
• English defeat
Spanish Armada
▼
1600
• Tokugawa period
of feudal rule
begins in Japan
This 1638 painting by Dutch artist Adam Willaerts
is believed to depict the Plymouth colony.
1680
• Popé leads Native American
rebellion in New Mexico
1619
• First meeting of
Virginia House of
Burgesses
1681
• William Penn’s charter
for Pennsylvania granted
1630
• Massachusetts Bay
Colony established
▲
HISTORY
▲▲
▲
Chapter Overview
1650
▼
1700
▼
1642
• English Civil
War begins
Visit the American Vision
Web site at tav.glencoe.com
and click on Chapter
Overviews—Chapter 2 to
preview chapter information.
1688
• Glorious Revolution establishes
limited monarchy in England
49
The Spanish and
French Build Empires
Main Idea
Reading Strategy
Reading Objectives
The Spanish and French colonies in
America reflected the values of European
society and the geography of the regions
in which they settled.
Taking Notes As you read about the
Spanish and French colonies in America,
use the section headings to create an outline similar to the one below.
• Explain the early Spanish settlement of
North America.
• Describe the colonial society in New
France.
Key Terms and Names
conquistador, Francisco Pizarro, presidio,
Popé, hidalgo, encomienda, hacienda,
vaquero, Northwest Passage, coureur
de bois
✦1500
The Spanish and French Build Empires
I. The Conquest of Mexico
A.
B.
II.
A.
B.
C.
✦1550
1519
Cortés lands on
Mexican coast
1532
Pizarro invades
Incan empire
Aztec depiction of Montezuma
viewing ominous omens of invaders
1565
St. Augustine, Florida,
established
Section Theme
Global Connections European colonizers shaped the new cultures of North
America.
✦1600
1608
City of Quebec
founded
✦1650
1609–1610
Santa Fe, New Mexico,
founded
In the spring of 1519, a courier arrived in Tenochtitlán, capital of the Aztec
empire. He had news for the emperor, Montezuma II. Bearded white men bearing
crosses were encamped on the eastern shores of the emperor’s realm.
Montezuma was worried. For several years he had heard reports of strange
men with “very light skin” operating in the Caribbean. His subjects had also seen
“towers or small mountains floating on the waves of the sea.” Now these strange
white men had come to his lands, and Montezuma did not know what to do.
The men on the coast were Spanish soldiers. As they watched the soldiers, the
people of eastern Mexico felt both fear and awe. One Aztec later recalled:
They came in battle array, as conquerors . . . their spears glinted in the sun, and their
“
pennons fluttered like bats. They made a loud clamor as they marched, for their coats of mail
and their weapons clashed and rattled. . . . They terrified everyone who saw them.
”
—quoted in The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico
The Conquest of Mexico
Leading the Spanish march into the Aztec empire was a 34-year-old Spaniard named
Hernán Cortés. At age 19, Cortés had boarded a ship bound for the Spanish Indies
determined to make his fortune. He had no idea then that 15 years later he would overturn a civilization and change the lives of millions of people.
50
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
The Spanish Encounter the Aztec
In 1511 Spanish
troops, led by Diego Velázquez, conquered Cuba.
Cortés took part in the invasion, and his courage
impressed Velázquez. He rewarded Cortés by giving
him control of several Native American villages.
Six years later, smallpox swept across Cuba,
killing thousands of Native Americans. Without
Native American labor, the farms and mines the
Spanish had built in Cuba could not function.
Velázquez asked Cortés to lead an expedition to the
Yucatán Peninsula to find new peoples who could be
forced to work for the Spanish. He also wanted to
investigate reports of a wealthy civilization there. On
February 18, 1519, Cortés set sail for Mexico. He had
11 ships, 550 men, and 16 horses.
The Invasion Begins
After crossing the Gulf of
Mexico, Cortés landed in the Yucatán Peninsula.
There he found a shipwrecked sailor—Jerónimo de
Aguilar—who spoke the local language and could
act as translator. Despite this advantage, Cortés
could not prevent an attack by thousands of warriors from a nearby city. The battle showed that the
Spanish had a technological advantage over the
local people. Spanish swords, crossbows, guns, and
cannons quickly killed more than 200 warriors. As a
peace offering, the leaders of the city gave Cortés 20
young women. Cortés then continued up the coast.
The people farther up the coast spoke a language
Aguilar did not know, but among the 20 women
traveling with the Spanish was Malinche, a woman
who knew the language. She translated for
Aguilar and he translated the words into
Spanish for Cortés. Malinche impressed
Cortés. He had her baptized, giving
her the name Marina. He called her
Doña Marina, and she became one
of his closest advisers.
From his talks with local
rulers, Cortés learned that the
Aztec had conquered many
peoples in the region and were
at war with others, including
the powerful Tlaxcalan people.
He realized that if he acted carefully, he might convince the
Tlaxcalan to join him against the
Aztec.
As Cortés marched inland to
Tlaxcala, his army’s physical
appearance helped him gain
allies. The local people had never
seen horses before. Their foaming
muzzles and the glistening armor they wore were
astonishing and terrifying, and when they charged it
seemed to one Aztec chronicler “as if stones were
raining on the earth.” Equally terrifying were the
“shooting sparks” of the Spanish cannons. After several encounters that displayed Spanish power, the
Tlaxcalan agreed to join with Cortés.
Two hundred miles away, Montezuma had to
decide how to respond to the Spanish. He believed in
a prophecy that said that the god Quetzalcoatl—a
fair-skinned, bearded deity—would someday return
from the east to conquer the Aztec. Montezuma did
not know if Cortés was Quetzalcoatl, but he did not
want to attack him until he knew for sure.
When he learned Cortés was negotiating with the
Tlaxcalan, Montezuma sent envoys to meet the
Spanish leader. The envoys promised Cortés that
Montezuma would pay a yearly tribute to the king of
Spain if Cortés halted his advance. To further appease
the Spanish, the envoys sacrificed several captives
and gave their blood to the Spanish to drink. The act
horrified the Spanish and alarmed Montezuma, since
he knew that Quetzalcoatl also hated human sacrifice.
With a joint Spanish-Tlaxcalan force heading
toward him, Montezuma decided to ambush Cortés
at the city of Cholula. Warned of the ambush by Doña
Marina, the Spanish attacked first, killing over 6,000
Cholulans. Montezuma now believed Cortés could
not be stopped. On November 8, 1519, Spanish troops
peacefully entered the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlán.
TURNING POINT
Cortés Defeats the Aztec
Sitting on an island in the
center of a lake, the city of Tenochtitlán astonished the
Spanish. It was larger than most European cities. The
central plaza had a huge double pyramid, and canoes
carried people along stone canals around the city.
Spanish suit of armor,
helmet, and pistols
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
51
Cortés describes events to Spanish Emperor Charles V:
The Spanish in Mexico
Historians are still not sure exactly what took place when
Hernán Cortés arrived in Tenochtitlán in 1519. The Aztec
version of events was recorded in artists’ sketches and
passed down verbally for centuries, while Cortés and others,
seeking to justify what they had done, wrote the original
Spanish reports. To determine what actually took place, historians must compare the stories and other evidence and
draw their own conclusions.
“I asked [Montezuma] to send some of his own men, to
whom I would add an equal number of Spaniards, to the
estates and houses of those nobles who had publicly offered
themselves as vassals of your Majesty, asking them to do your
Majesty some service with what riches they might possess. . . .
With my men he sent his own, ordering them to visit the rulers
of those cities and to require of each one of them in my
name a certain measure of gold. And so it came about that
each one of those lords to whom he sent gave very
freely when he was asked, whether jewels, small bars
and plates of gold and silver, or other valuables
which he possessed; of all this treasure gathered together
the fifth due to your Majesty amounted to over two thousand four hundred pesos of gold. . . .”
—quoted in Five Letters of Cortés
to the Emperor
Conquistador’s
sword
The battle in Tenochtitlán
Some of what the Spanish saw here horrified them as
well. The central plaza, for example, contained the
tzompantli—a huge rack displaying thousands of
human skulls—and the Aztec priests wore their long
hair matted down with dried human blood.
Surrounded by thousands of Aztec, Cortés
decided to take Montezuma hostage. Montezuma,
resigned to his fate, did not resist. Under instructions
from Cortés, he stopped all human sacrifice and
ordered the statues of the gods to be replaced with
Christian crosses and images of the Virgin Mary.
Enraged at their loss of power, the Aztec priests
organized a rebellion in the spring of 1520. The battle
raged for days. Spanish cannons and crossbows killed
thousands of Aztec. While trying to stop the fighting,
Montezuma was hit by stones and later died.
Realizing they would soon be overrun, the Spanish
fought their way out of the city. Over 450 Spaniards
died in the battle, as did more than 4,000 Aztec, in
what became known as Noche Triste—the “Sad Night.”
Although he had been driven from the city, Cortés
refused to give up. He and his men took refuge with
the Tlaxcalan and began building boats to attack the
Aztec capital by water. At the same time, smallpox
erupted in the region. Tens of thousands of Native
52
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
Americans died. As one Aztec recorded, the disease
devastated the defenders of Tenochtitlán:
While the Spaniards were in Tlaxcala, a great
“
plague broke out here in Tenochtitlán. . . . Sores
erupted on our faces, our breasts, our bellies; we
were covered with agonizing sores from head to
foot. The illness was so dreadful that no one could
walk or move. . . . If they did move their bodies,
they screamed with pain.
”
—quoted in The Broken Spears: The Aztec
Account of the Conquest of Mexico
Finally, in May 1521, Cortés launched his attack
against the greatly weakened Aztec forces. His fleet
sank the Aztec canoes and landed troops in the city.
By August 1521, Cortés had won.
Reading Check Examining What was the purpose
of Hernán Cortés’s expedition to Mexico?
New Spain Expands
After defeating the Aztec, Cortés ordered a new
city to be built on the ruins of Tenochtitlán. The city,
named Mexico, became the capital of the new
The Aztec view of the Spanish actions:
“When the Spaniards were installed in the palace, they
asked Motecuhzoma [Montezuma] about the city’s resources
and reserves. . . . They questioned him closely and then
demanded gold. Motecuhzoma guided them to it. . . . When
they arrived at the treasure house called
Aztec
Aztec
Teucalco, the riches of gold and feathers were
war
club
war
brought out to them. . . . Next they went to
club
Motecuhzoma’s storehouse, in the place called
Totocalco [Palace of the Birds], where his personal treasures were kept. The Spaniards grinned
like little beasts and patted each other with delight.
When they entered the hall of treasures, it was as
if they had arrived in Paradise. They searched everywhere and coveted everything; they were slaves to
their own greed. . . . They seized these treasures as if they
were their own, as if this plunder were merely a stroke of
good luck.”
—quoted in The Broken Spears: The Aztec
Account of the Conquest of Mexico
Learning From History
1. How would you describe the
different tones and attitudes in
each account?
2. What factors should you consider
when evaluating why these passages
present different versions of the
same events?
Spanish colony of New Spain. Cortés then sent several expeditions to conquer the rest of the region. The
men who led these expeditions became known as
conquistadors, or “conquerors.”
Pizarro Conquers the Inca
While the Spanish were
fighting for control of Central America, a Spanish
army captain named Francisco Pizarro began exploring South America’s west coast. In 1526 he landed in
Peru and encountered the Inca empire. After the
Spanish king granted him permission to conquer the
Inca, Pizarro returned to Peru in 1531 with a small
force. When he later marched inland in the spring of
1532, he learned that a powerful emperor named
Atahualpa governed the Inca. After reaching the Incan
town of Cajamarca, Pizarro sent his brother to find
Atahualpa and invite him to Cajamarca.
While waiting for the emperor to arrive, Pizarro hid
cavalry and cannons around the town square. If
Atahualpa refused to submit to Spain, Pizarro
intended to kidnap him. When Atahualpa arrived, he
entered the square backed by some 6,000 of his followers. Pizarro sent a priest to meet Atahualpa first. When
the priest gave a Bible to Atahualpa, the emperor
threw it to the ground. This rejection of Christianity
was enough for Pizarro, who ordered the cannons to
fire and the cavalry to charge. He and 20 soldiers then
rushed the emperor and took him prisoner.
Pizarro tried to rule Peru by keeping Atahualpa as
a hostage. Less than a year later, however, he executed the Incan emperor and installed a series of figurehead emperors who ruled in name only and had
to follow his orders. Although many people accepted
the new system created by Pizarro, others fled to the
mountains and continued to fight the Spanish conquistadors until 1572.
Searching for Cities of Gold
Pizarro’s success in
finding Peru fueled rumors of other wealthy cities.
In 1528, Pánfilo de Narváez searched northern
Florida for a fabled city of gold. Finding nothing
and having lost contact with his ships, Narváez and
his men built rafts and tried to sail to Mexico by following the coastline. They made it to what is today
Texas, although most of the men, including
Narváez, died in the attempt. The survivors, led by
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and an enslaved man
named Estéban, wandered across Texas and New
Mexico before reaching New Spain in 1536.
Many conquistadors had also heard tales of the
Seven Golden Cities of Cibola rumored to exist
north of New Spain. Hoping to find Cibola, the
Spanish sent a large expedition northward in 1540
under the command of Francisco Vásquez de
Coronado. For several months Coronado wandered
through the southwestern area of what is today the
United States. Members of his expedition traveled
west to the Colorado River and east into territory
that today belongs to Kansas. Finding nothing but
wind-swept plains and strange “shaggy cows”
(buffalo), Coronado returned to Mexico.
While Coronado explored the southwestern
region of North America, Hernando de Soto took a
large expedition into the region north of Florida. De
Soto’s expedition explored parts of what are today
North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas,
and Texas. As they crisscrossed the region, the
Spanish killed many Native Americans and raided
their villages for supplies. After more than four
years of wandering, the expedition returned to
New Spain, but without De Soto, who had become
sick and died. His men buried him in the
Mississippi River.
The Spanish Settle the Southwest
The failure of
explorers to find gold or other wealth north of New
Spain slowed Spanish settlement of the region. It
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
53
was not until 1598 that settlers, led by Juan de Oñate,
migrated north of the Rio Grande. Oñate’s expedition almost perished while crossing northern
Mexico. When they finally reached the Rio Grande,
the survivors organized a feast to give thanks. This
“Spanish Thanksgiving” is celebrated each April in
El Paso, Texas.
The Spanish gave the name New Mexico to the territory north of New Spain. Pedro de Peralta, the first
governor of New Mexico, founded the capital city of
Santa Fe in 1609 or 1610. The Spanish also built forts
called presidios throughout the region to protect settlers and to serve as trading posts. Despite these
efforts, few Spaniards migrated to the harsh region.
Instead, the Catholic Church became the primary
force for colonizing the Southwest.
Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Spanish priests built missions and spread the
Christian faith among the Navaho and Pueblo
peoples of New Mexico. Beginning in 1769, Spanish
missionaries led by the Franciscan priest Junipero
Serra took control of California by establishing a
chain of missions from San Diego to San Francisco. A
road called El Camino Real—or the Royal
Highway—linked the missions together.
The priests and missionaries in California and those
in New Mexico took different approaches to their
work. In California, they forced the mostly nomadic
Native Americans to live in villages near the missions.
In New Mexico, on the other hand, the priests and
missionaries adapted their efforts to fit into the
lifestyle of the Pueblo people. They built churches near
where the Pueblo people lived and farmed, and tried
to teach them Catholic ideas and European culture.
History
Mission Life The oldest surviving mission in Santa Fe, the Chapel of San
Miguel, is a reminder of Spanish colonial rule. What role did missions play
in Spanish rule?
The Spanish priests tried to end traditional Pueblo
religious practices that conflicted with Catholic
beliefs. Some priests beat and whipped Native
Americans who defied them. In response, a Native
American religious leader named Popé organized an
uprising against the Spanish in 1680. Some 17,000
warriors destroyed most of the missions in New
Mexico. It took the Spanish more than a decade to
regain control of the region.
Reading Check Identifying Where did most people
who colonized the southwest part of North America come from?
Spanish American Society
The society that developed in New Spain was a
product of the Spanish conquest. The conquistadors
were adventurers. Most were low-ranking nobles,
called hidalgos, or working-class tradespeople. They
had come to the colonies in America in search of
wealth and prestige. The society they built in America
reflected those goals.
The Encomienda System
After defeating the
Aztec, Cortés rewarded his men by giving each of
them control over some of the towns in the Aztec
empire. This was called the encomienda system. Each
Spaniard deserving a reward was made an
encomendero, or commissioner, and was given control
over a group of Native American villages. The villagers had to pay their encomendero a share of the
products they harvested or produced.
Under this system, the encomendero had obligations too. He was supposed to protect the Native
Americans and work to convert them to Christianity.
Unfortunately, many encomenderos abused their
power. Native Americans were frequently overworked, and many died.
A Society Based on Class
The people of Spain’s
colonies in the Americas formed a highly structured
society. Birth, income, and education determined a
person’s position. At the top were peninsulares—
people who had been born in Spain and who were
appointed to most of the higher government and
church positions. Below the peninsulares were
criollos (kree·OH·yohs)—those born in the colonies
of Spanish parents. Many criollos were wealthy,
but high colonial positions were reserved only for
peninsulares.
Mestizos made up the next level of society. They
were of mixed Spanish and Native American parentage. Since many Spanish immigrants married Native
Americans, there were many mestizos,
and their social status varied greatly. A
few were accepted at the top of society. Others worked as artisans, merchants, and shopkeepers. Most,
however, were poor and lived at the
lowest level of society. The lowest
level also included Native Americans,
Africans, and people of mixed Spanish
and African or African and Native
American ancestry. These people provided most of the labor for New
Spain’s farms, mines, and ranches.
To govern this vast, diverse empire
in America, the Spanish king created
the Council of the Indies. The
Council advised the king and
watched over all colonial activities. To
manage local affairs, the king created
a special court in Mexico known as
the audiencia. The audiencia’s members
were not only judges but also administrators and lawmakers. To ensure
that his interests were represented,
the king divided his American empire
into regions called viceroyalties. He
then appointed a viceroy to rule each
region as his representative.
in History
Bartolomé de Las Casas
1474–1566
In the years following the Spanish
conquest, many people began to
protest against the abuses of the
encomienda system. One prominent
advocate for the Native Americans was
Bartolomé de Las Casas, Bishop of
Chiapas. As a young man, Las Casas
traveled to Hispaniola in 1502. He soon
became horrified by what he saw. The
Spanish settlers tortured, burned, and
cut off the hands and noses of Native
Americans to force them to obey.
Las Casas maintained that the
Church and the king had a duty to protect Native Americans. In this view, he
had the support of the pope. “The said
Indians,” declared Pope Paul III, “are by
no means to be deprived of their liberty
or the possessions of their property . . .
nor should they in any way be
enslaved.”
Las Casas published several books
describing the destruction of the Native
Americans. His books were read
throughout Europe, creating pressure
on the Spanish to change their policies.
Mining and Ranching When the Spanish realized
that most Native American cities did not have much
gold, they set up mines and used Native American
labor to extract minerals from the ground. Ultimately,
however, it was not gold that enriched Spain, but silver. The Spanish discovered huge deposits of silver
ore in the 1540s and set up mining camps all across
northern Mexico, transforming the economy. The
work in the dark, damp mineshafts was very difficult.
Many miners were killed by explosions and cave-ins.
Others died from exhaustion.
Many of the silver mines were located in the arid
lands of the north. The land could not grow crops,
but it could feed vast herds of cattle and sheep. To
feed the miners, Spaniards created large cattle
ranches in northern Mexico. These huge ranches covering thousands of acres were called haciendas. The
men who herded the cattle were called vaqueros, and
cowhands in the United States later adopted their
lifestyle. The words lasso and corral are Spanish
words that originated with the vaqueros.
Reading Check Describing Why did the Spaniards
set up mines and cattle ranches in northern Mexico?
In response, the Spanish government
stopped granting encomiendas and
banned Native American slavery.
Slowly, as encomenderos died without
heirs, the encomienda system came to
an end. Las Casas died in 1566, still
outraged at the treatment of the Native
Americans. “Surely,” he wrote in his
will, “God will wreak his fury and anger
against Spain some day for the unjust
wars waged against the American
Indians.”
The French Empire in America
In 1524, three years after Cortés conquered the
Aztec, King Francis I of France sent Giovanni da
Verrazano to map North America’s coastline.
Francis wanted to find the Northwest Passage—the
northern route through North America to the Pacific
Ocean. Verrazano mapped the coastline from North
Carolina to Newfoundland, but he found no sign of
a passage through the continent. Ten years later, as
he watched Spain’s powerful empire grow stronger,
Francis sent another explorer named Jacques Cartier
to North America.
France Explores America
On his first two trips to
North America, Cartier discovered and mapped the
St. Lawrence River. He then returned a third time in
1541 intending to found a colony, but the harsh winter
convinced him to return to France. In the decades
after Cartier’s last voyage, fighting between Catholics
and Protestants tore apart France. For the next 60
years, the French government made no further
attempt to colonize North America. In the early 1600s,
however, the French government’s interest revived.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
55
New France Is Founded
In the 1500s, the French
began to fish near North America. The fishing crews
often went ashore to trade their goods for furs from
the Native Americans. By 1600 fur—particularly
beaver fur—had become very fashionable in Europe.
As the demand for fur increased, French merchants
became interested in expanding the fur trade. In 1602
King Henry IV of France authorized a group of French
merchants to create colonies in North America.
The merchants hired the royal geographer,
Samuel de Champlain, to help them colonize North
America. In 1605 Champlain helped establish a
French colony in Acadia, what is today Nova Scotia.
The site was attractive because of the many rivers
that flowed to Acadia’s eastern seaboard. In 1608 he
founded Quebec, which became the capital of the
new colony of New France.
Life in New France
The company that founded
New France wanted to make money from the fur
trade, and so they did not need settlers to clear the
land and build farms. As a result the colony grew
slowly, and by 1666 it had just over 3,000 people.
Most of the fur traders did not even live in the colony.
Known as coureurs de bois (ku·RUHR·duh·BWAH),
or “runners of the woods,” the fur traders lived
among the Native Americans with whom they
traded. They learned their languages and customs
and often married Native American women.
The fur traders were not the only ones who traveled into the woods to live with the Native
Americans. Soon after the founding of Quebec, Jesuit
missionaries arrived intending to convert the Native
Americans to Christianity. Known as “black robes” to
the Native Americans, the Jesuits tried to live among
the local people and teach them the Catholic faith.
Reading Check Explaining Why did King Francis I
of France send Verrazano and Cartier to America?
New France Expands
Refugee Migration to America
Past: The Huguenots
French Protestants, known as Huguenots, migrated to America in large
numbers during the late 1600s. Violent
persecutions under King Louis XIV
caused around one million people to
leave France. Many settled in South
Carolina, while others found sanctuary
in Rhode Island, New York, and Virginia.
Present: Jewish Immigration
Following the tragic events of
World War II, thousands of homeless European Jews came to the
United States. Many Eastern Jews,
particularly from Iran and Syria,
soon followed. With the collapse
of the Soviet Union in 1991, many
Russian Jews migrated to America. Unlike the Russian immigrants of the 1800s, these Jews
had little opportunity to maintain
Jewish customs or to study
Hebrew.
56
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
The slow growth of New France worried the
French as they watched the Spanish and English
build prosperous colonies farther south. Finally, in
1663, France’s king Louis XIV seized control of New
France and made it a royal colony. His government
then launched a series of projects to expand the
colony’s population.
The French government began by shipping over
4,000 immigrants to New France. It then sent over 900
young women to provide wives for the many single
men in the colony. If a woman under 16 or a man
under 20 married, they received a royal wedding gift.
Parents who had more than 10 children received
financial bonuses. Fathers whose children did not get
married early were fined. By the 1670s the population
was nearly 7,000, and by 1760 it was over 60,000.
Exploring the Mississippi
In addition to promoting
immigration to New France, the French government
began exploring North America. In 1673 a fur trader
named Louis Joliet and a Jesuit priest named Jacques
Marquette set off in search of a waterway the
Algonquian people called the “big river”—the
Mississippi. Canoeing along inland lakes and rivers,
the two men finally found the Mississippi River and
followed it as far south as the Arkansas River. In 1682
René-Robert Cavelier de La Salle (known as Lord
La Salle) followed the Mississippi all the way to the
Gulf of Mexico, becoming the first European to do so.
La Salle then claimed the region for France, and he
named the entire territory Louisiana in honor of King
Louis XIV.
GEOGRAPHY
Settling Louisiana
Count Frontenac, the governor
of New France, hoped to ship furs to France by way of
the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico.
Unfortunately, settling the lower Mississippi proved
to be very difficult. The coastline had no good harbors, and shifting sandbars made navigation dangerous. The oppressive heat caused food to spoil quickly.
The swamps were breeding grounds for mosquitoes
that spread yellow fever and malaria.
The French did not permanently settle the region
until 1698, when Lord d’Iberville founded Biloxi, in
what is today Mississippi. Over the next few
decades, more French settlements appeared in
Louisiana, including Mobile and New Orleans.
Farther upriver, the French built several forts, including Fort St. Louis and Fort Detroit, to ensure control
of the Mississippi River.
The French settlers in southern Louisiana realized
that the crops that could be grown there, such as sugar,
rice, tobacco, and indigo, required hard manual labor.
Few settlers were willing to do that kind of labor unless
they were paid extremely well. Enslaved people, on the
other hand, could be compelled to do the work. By
1721 the French in Louisiana had imported over 1,800
enslaved Africans to work on their plantations.
Rivalry With Spain
The Spanish had always been
concerned about the French colonies in North
America. Indeed, they had founded the town of
St. Augustine, Florida, in 1565 to protect their claim
Flag of New France Settlers in New France often
flew this flag of the French Royal Navy. They
also flew the French Royal
Banner, which was blue
instead of white.
to the region after the French had tried to settle
what is today the Carolinas. St. Augustine prospered and became the first permanent town established by Europeans in what is today the United
States. The arrival of the French at the mouth of the
Mississippi spurred the Spanish into action once
again. In 1690 they established their first mission in
what is today eastern Texas. In 1716 the first Spanish
settlers arrived in eastern Texas to secure the
Spanish claim and to block French expansion into
the region. The French and Spanish empires in
North America now bordered each other. Neither
empire, however, posed a serious threat to the
other ’s position in North America. The real challenge to French and Spanish domination of North
America would come from another quarter. While
Spain focused its colonies primarily in the
Southwest and France along the Mississippi River,
England began settling numerous colonies along a
narrow strip of the Atlantic coast.
Reading Check Explaining Why did the French
establish forts and settlements along the Mississippi?
Checking for Understanding
Critical Thinking
Analyzing Visuals
1. Define: conquistador, presidio, hidalgo,
encomienda, hacienda, vaquero,
Northwest Passage, coureur de bois.
2. Identify: Francisco Pizarro, Popé.
3. Explain how the fur trade contributed
to the slow growth of New France.
5. Synthesizing Why did the various
groups of Spaniards come to North
America?
6. Analyzing Were the French or Spanish
colonies more successful? Why?
7. Categorizing Use a graphic organizer
similar to the one below to list the
social classes that developed in New
Spain.
8. Analyzing Photographs Study the
photograph of the Chapel of San
Miguel on page 54. How did the
Catholic Church contribute to the
Spanish settlement of the New Mexico
territory?
Reviewing Themes
4. Global Connections The king of Spain
created a scheme to oversee his empire
in America. What system did he use to
govern the distant colonies?
Highest ____________________
____________________
____________________
Lowest ____________________
Writing About History
9. Persuasive Writing Imagine you are
an officeholder for the French king and
want to support his policies. Write an
advertisement for a French newspaper
to encourage people to settle in New
France.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
57
English Colonies
in America
Main Idea
Reading Strategy
Reading Objectives
Religious, economic, and political
changes in England led the English to
establish colonies along the eastern coast
of North America.
Organizing As you read about the early
troubles of the Jamestown colony, complete a graphic organizer similar to the
one below by listing the problems that
faced the colonists.
• Explain the religious and economic reasons why England became interested in
America.
• Describe the founding of Jamestown
and explain why it succeeded.
Key Terms and Names
John Cabot, Puritan, joint-stock company,
privateer, Walter Raleigh, Powhatan
Confederacy, burgesses, headright,
proprietary colony
✦1500
Section Theme
Jamestown’s Troubles
Geography and History The headright
system provided settlers with new ways
to acquire more land.
✦1550
1497
John Cabot explores North
America’s coastline for England
1587
Roanoke colony
founded
✦1600
1607
Jamestown
founded
1619
House of Burgesses
meets for the first time
✦1650
1634
Maryland
founded
On July 30, 1619, the first elected assembly in the English colonies met in
Jamestown, Virginia. Two delegates from each of the 10 Virginia settlements, along
with the governor and his 6 councilors, met in the choir of the Jamestown church. This
governing body became known as the House of Burgesses.
When Governor Sir George Yeardley had arrived in Jamestown in April 1619, he
carried instructions to call an assembly so that the settlers could “make and ordain
whatsoever laws and orders should by them be thought good and profitable.” The House of
Burgesses met for five days, “sweating and stewing, and battling flies and mosquitoes.” It
passed strict laws against swearing, gambling, drunkenness, and excess in dress. It also made
church attendance compulsory and passed laws against injuring the Native Americans.
The House of Burgesses meeting marked the first time colonists had been given a voice in
their colonial government. They believed that right was now irrevocable.
Virginia House
of Burgesses
—adapted from Jamestown, 1544–1699
England Takes Interest in America
The Jamestown colony was England’s first permanent settlement in North America, but
it was established more than 100 years after the first English explorers arrived. In May 1497,
John Cabot headed west across the Atlantic. King Henry VII of England had sent Cabot to
58
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
“discover and find, whatsoever isles, countries, regions
or provinces . . . which before this time have been
unknown to all Christians.” Cabot, an Italian navigator, had long hoped to find a western route to Asia. He
wanted, he said, to reach “the lands from which
Oriental caravans brought their goods. . . . ”
Cabot landed somewhere near Nova Scotia, then
sailed southward along the “barren shores” and
“wooded coasts” of America. While he did not see
any people, he did see “notched trees, snares for
game, and needles for making nets.” Back in England,
King Henry granted Cabot a pension and bonus for
finding what the king called the “new found land.”
The next year, Cabot sailed west on a second expedition to America. He was never seen again.
Although John Cabot arrived in America less than
five years after Columbus, the English did not try to
colonize America for the next 80 years. The English
government had little money, and Cabot had found
no gold or other wealth. There was also no compelling reason for anyone in England to migrate to
America. Furthermore, the Spanish had already
claimed America, and their claim had been upheld
by the pope. In 1497 Spain and England were both
Catholic countries and allies against France. Any
English attempt to settle America would have
European Explorations and Settlements, 1497–1682
English exploration
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31
1. Interpreting Maps According to the
map, what nation first explored North
America in 1497?
2. Applying Geographic Skills In what
areas did French explorers Champlain
and Cartier
140°W concentrate
130°W their efforts?
120°W
N
M
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0 °W
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Narv´aez
Gulf of 1528
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1542–4 3
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540 La
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o nad o 1
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1679–82
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to 8–42
de Va Mississippi R.De S
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Joliet 1673
N
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60
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in 1
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Montreal
ssouri R.
10
°
16
0
Hudson
Bay
Ch
am
pl a
NORTH
AMERICA
Ca
6
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AFRICA
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Lima
110°W
100°W
90°W
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Cuzco
40°W
30°W
angered the Spanish and upset the alliance. During
the late 1500s, however, a series of dramatic religious,
economic, and political changes occurred that led to
the founding of the first English colonies in America.
TURNING POINT
The Reformation Divides Europe At the time
Cabot sailed to America, virtually all of western
Europe was Catholic. This unity began to break apart
in 1517, when a German monk named Martin Luther
published an attack on the Church, accusing it of corruption. Luther’s attack marked the beginning of the
Protestant Reformation. In 1520 Luther was expelled
from the Catholic Church, but his ideas continued to
spread rapidly across western Europe. Luther himself went on to found the German Protestant Church,
now called the Lutheran Church.
As the Reformation spread, an important development occurred in Switzerland when John Calvin
suggested that neither kings nor bishops should control the Church. Calvin argued that congregations
should choose their own elders and ministers to run
the Church for them. Calvin’s ideas had a profound
impact on England, and ultimately America, because
many of the first English settlers in America shared
Calvin’s ideas.
The Reformation Changes England
In contrast to
the theological debate sweeping Europe, the
Reformation in England began with a simple disagreement between the king and the pope. In 1527 King
Henry VIII asked the pope to annul his marriage to
Catherine of Aragon. It was not unusual for the pope
to grant a divorce to a king, but in this case the pope
hesitated. Catherine was the king of Spain’s aunt, and
the pope did not want to anger the Spanish king.
The pope’s delay infuriated Henry. He broke with
the Catholic Church, declared that he was now the
head of England’s church, and arranged for the divorce
himself. The Catholic Church in England became the
Anglican Church, but because Henry agreed with
Catholic doctrine, the Anglican Church kept the organization and most of the rituals of the Catholic Church.
Following Henry’s break with the Catholic
Church, those who wanted to keep the Catholic
organization of the Anglican Church began to struggle with those who wanted to “purify” it of all
Catholic elements. People who wanted to purify the
Church became known as Puritans.
Under the reign of Henry’s daughter, Queen
Elizabeth I, many Puritan ideas such as the supreme
authority of the Bible gained acceptance within the
Anglican Church. Still, many Catholic rituals
60
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
remained unchanged. Although the Puritans objected
to the Catholic rituals, the most important issue was
who controlled the Church. John Calvin’s ideas had
influenced many Puritan leaders. They argued that
every congregation should elect its own ministers and
elders to control the Church instead of having bishops
and archbishops appointed by the monarch.
The Puritan cause suffered a serious setback in
1603, when James I became king. Although King
James was Protestant, he refused to tolerate any
changes in the structure of the Anglican Church.
Since the king headed the Church and appointed its
leaders, the Puritan idea of electing ministers was a
direct challenge to royal authority. James’s refusal to
reform the Church made many Puritans willing to
leave England. Ultimately, many would choose
America as their refuge.
Economic Changes in England At the same time
that the Reformation was transforming the English
Church, a revolution in trade and agriculture was
changing English society. At the beginning of the
1500s, much of England’s land was divided into large
estates. The nobles who owned these estates rented
their land to tenant farmers. In the 1500s, Europeans
History Through Art
Warring Empires In 1588 the Spanish Armada, depicted in this painting,
set out with a huge fleet to settle scores with England. Spain was defeated,
but if it had won, England might have become Catholic again. Why did
England become more strongly Protestant after this event?
began to buy large quantities of English wool. As the
demand for wool increased, many English landowners realized they could make more money by raising
sheep than by renting their land.
The landowners converted their estates into sheep
farms by enclosing their land and evicting the tenants.
This became known as the enclosure movement. It
created thousands of poor, unemployed beggars who
wandered from town to town looking for work. For
these people, leaving England for a chance at a better
life in America was appealing.
By 1550 England was producing more wool than
Europeans would buy, and the price fell. England’s
merchants needed to find new markets to sell their
surplus wool, and they began organizing joint-stock
companies to find those new markets.
Joint-stock companies pooled the money of many
investors. This enabled the company to raise large
amounts of money for big projects. The development
of joint-stock companies meant that English merchants could afford to trade with, and colonize, other
parts of the world without government financing.
Reading Check Explaining Why did many Puritans
become willing to leave England?
England Returns to America
The need to find new markets for their wool convinced English merchants to begin searching for a
northern water route through North America to Asia.
In 1576 an Englishman named Martin Frobisher
took three ships to America to search for a northwest
passage. He made two more trips by 1578, but
he did not find the passage. Although he failed,
Frobisher’s voyages were important. For the first
time in several decades, the English had returned to
America.
England’s new interest in America contributed to
its growing rivalry with Spain. The Reformation had
changed Europe’s balance of power. England had
become the leading Protestant power, while Spain
remained a staunch defender of Catholicism. The former allies were now enemies.
After the Reformation, England not only had new
enemies, it had new allies as well. By the 1560s, most
Dutch people had become Protestant despite being
part of the Spanish empire. When the Spanish tried to
suppress Protestantism in the Netherlands, the Dutch
rebelled. To help the Dutch revolt, Queen Elizabeth
allowed English privateers to attack Spanish ships.
Privateers are privately owned ships licensed by the
government to attack ships of other countries.
Gilbert and Raleigh
English privateers found it
difficult to attack Spanish ships in the Caribbean
because England had no bases in the region. This led
many of Queen Elizabeth’s advisers to recommend
that England establish outposts in America to support naval operations against Spain.
The first attempts at colonization were not promising. In 1578 Sir Humphrey Gilbert, a well-known
English soldier, received a charter from Queen
Elizabeth to create a colony in America. Gilbert made
two attempts to colonize America. Both failed, and
Gilbert himself died at sea.
Gilbert’s half-brother, Walter Raleigh, persuaded
Queen Elizabeth to renew Gilbert’s charter in his
own name. He then sent two ships to scout the
American coastline. The ships passed through the
Outer Banks along what is today North Carolina and
landed on an island the Native Americans called
Roanoke. Impressed by the discovery, Queen
Elizabeth knighted Raleigh, and he in turn named
the land Virginia—in honor of Elizabeth, who was
known as “the Virgin Queen.”
The Lost Colony of Roanoke In 1585 Raleigh sent
about 100 men to settle on Roanoke. After a hard
winter, the unhappy colonists returned to England.
Raleigh tried again in 1587. He sent 91 men, 17
women, and 9 children to Roanoke. A month later
Roanoke’s governor, John White, headed back to
England for more supplies. War erupted between
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
61
England and Spain while White was in England, and
he was not able to return until 1590. When he finally
returned, the colony was gone. There were no bodies,
only empty houses and the letters “CRO” carved on a
post, possibly referring to the Croatoan—a Native
American group who lived nearby. No one knows
what happened, and the fate of the “Lost Colony” of
Roanoke remains a mystery today.
Reading Check Summarizing Why did England
want to establish outposts in America?
Jamestown Is Founded
Early Troubles Most of Jamestown’s colonists
were townspeople. They knew little about living in
the woods and could not make use of the abundant
fish and game around them. Even worse, none of
the colonists knew how to raise livestock or cultivate crops. Additional problems occurred when the
upperclass “gentlemen” among the
colonists refused to do manual labor.
Making matters worse, Jamestown’s
governing council argued constantly
and could not make decisions. The
results of all of these problems were
nearly catastrophic. Lawlessness, sickness, and food shortages all took their
toll. Although about 200 new settlers
arrived in 1608, only 53 colonists were
still alive by the end of the year. All of
the remaining colonists may have died
as well, in fact, had it not been for two
men— Captain John Smith and Chief
Powhatan.
Captain John Smith, a member of the
colony’s governing council, emerged as
Jamestown’s only strong leader. Born
into a poor family, Smith had left home
named John Rolfe announced to the
as a young man to become a soldier of
colonial administrator that he and
fortune. In late 1607, with winter
Pocahontas had fallen in love, and he
approaching and the colony short of
asked to marry her.
food, Smith explored the region around
After hearing the proposal, Chief
Jamestown and began trading with the
Powhatan gave his consent, and the
local Native Americans—a group called
couple soon married. Eventually,
the Powhatan Confederacy, led by
Pocahontas bore one son, whom they
named Thomas. In 1616 Pocahontas
Chief Powhatan. It was this trade that
traveled with her husband and son to
helped the colony get through its first
England to search for investors for the
two winters.
Virginia Company. Unfortunately,
Frustrated by events in Jamestown,
Pocahontas grew ill in 1617, just before
the Virginia Company appointed a new
the family was due to return to
America, and she died of pneumonia or
governor with absolute authority,
smallpox.
Thomas West, Lord De La Warr. To
entice settlers, the company offered land
Shortly after the war with Spain ended in 1604, a
group of English investors petitioned the new king of
England, James I, for a charter to plant colonies in
Virginia. In 1606 James granted the charter. Their
new company was named the Virginia Company.
in History
Pocahontas 1596–1617
In 1623 Captain John Smith told a
remarkable tale to a British commission
investigating the Virginia Company. In
1607 Native Americans had captured
him and prepared, as he said, to “beate
out his braines.” Just then, Pocahontas,
the 11-year-old daughter of Chief
Powhatan, “got his head in her armes,
and laid her owne upon his to save him
from death.”
Although her father watched the
English with concern, Pocahontas continued to interact with the people in the
Jamestown settlement. Unfortunately,
her friendliness and curiosity were not
kindly repaid. While visiting a nearby
Native American settlement in 1613,
Pocahontas was abducted by Captain
Samuel Argall, a Jamestown resident.
Pocahontas was supposedly being held
as ransom for the lives of English prisoners and for arms, tools, and food.
After the Native Americans gave what
they could, however, the English still
refused to return Pocahontas.
The following year, a battle seemed
imminent when the two sides met, but
two of Pocahontas’s brothers were so
excited to see her that they agreed to
work out a truce. Soon thereafter, a
member of the Virginia Company
62
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
On December 20, 1606, the Virginia Company sent
three small ships—the Susan Constant, the Godspeed,
and the Discovery—and 144 men to Virginia. After a
difficult trip, the ships arrived off the coast of North
America, and the colonists founded a settlement on
the banks of a river. In honor of their king, they
named the river the James River and their settlement
Jamestown. Unfortunately, the colonists’ site turned
out to be too close to the sea. The land they selected
was swampy and swarming with malaria-carrying
mosquitoes. The location was just the beginning of
Jamestown’s problems.
to anyone who worked for the colony for seven
years. The offer produced results. In August 1609,
400 new settlers arrived in Jamestown.
The arrival of so many settlers late in the summer created a crisis. There was not enough food,
nor could enough be grown before winter.
Governor De La Warr had not arrived yet, and
John Smith had suffered a gunpowder burn and
returned to England. Without strong leadership,
the colony rapidly deteriorated. As winter neared,
the settlers began to steal food from the Native
Americans. In response, Native American warriors
attacked the settlers.
The winter of 1609 and 1610 became
known as the “starving time.” The colonists
at Jamestown ate “dogs, rats, snakes, toadstools, [and] horsehides,” and a few settlers
even engaged in cannibalism, digging up
corpses from graves and eating them.
By the spring of 1610, only 60 settlers were
still alive. They abandoned Jamestown and
headed downriver. On the way, they met three
English ships heading for the colony. On board
were supplies, 150 more settlers, and the colony’s
governor, Lord De La Warr. De La Warr convinced
the settlers to stay. Instead of returning to Jamestown,
however, many decided to establish other towns
along the James River. By 1618 there were several
towns in Virginia.
De La Warr’s deputy, Thomas Dale, then drafted a
harsh code of laws for Jamestown. Settlers were
organized into work gangs and required to work at
least six hours per day. Dale’s discipline saved the
colony, but Jamestown still did not thrive. In 1614
Dale decided to permit private cultivation. Settlers
could acquire three acres of land if they gave the
colony one month of work and 21⁄ 2 barrels of corn.
Whatever else they produced, they could keep.
According to one colonist, Ralph Hamor, the new
system dramatically increased production:
When our people were fed out of the common
“
store and labored jointly . . . glad was the man that
could slip from his labor . . . presuming that howsoever the harvest prospered, the general store must
maintain them, by which means we reaped not so
much corn for the labors of 30 men, as three men have
done for themselves.
”
—quoted in Colonial America
The new policy ensured Jamestown’s survival, but
the colony still had to find a product to sell for profit
History Through Art
Critical Leadership Captain John Smith (left)
helped save early Jamestown by trading with the local
Native Americans. Sidney King painted Jamestown’s
fort as it must have appeared around 1607. Why do
you think the fort was set up with only three sides?
in England. The solution was a product King James
had already condemned as a “vile weed [of] black
stinking fumes [that were] baleful to the nose, harmful to the brain, and dangerous to the lungs”—
tobacco.
Tobacco Saves the Colony
Well before the founding of Jamestown, the Spanish began shipping
tobacco from their Caribbean colonies to Europe.
Smoking tobacco became very popular in Europe in
the early 1600s. The Jamestown settlers had tried
growing tobacco, but the local variety was too bitter.
One colonist named John Rolfe continued to
experiment, using seeds imported from Trinidad. He
developed a new curing method, and in 1614 he
shipped about 2,600 pounds (1,180 kg) to England.
Rolfe’s tobacco was not as good as Spanish tobacco,
but it sold for a good price, and the settlers soon
began planting large quantities of it.
The First Assembly In 1618 the new head of the
Virginia Company in London, Edwin Sandys, introduced major reforms to attract settlers. The first
reform gave the colony the right to elect its own
assembly to propose laws. The first general assembly
met in the Jamestown church on July 30, 1619. The
new Virginia government included a governor,
6 councilors, and 20 representatives, 2 from each of
the colony’s 10 towns. The representatives were
called burgesses, and the assembly was called the
House of Burgesses.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
63
Headrights Lure Settlers
To entice new settlers to
Virginia, the company also introduced the system of
headrights, in which new settlers who bought a
share in the company or paid for their passage were
granted 50 acres of land. They were given 50 more
acres for each family member over 15 years of age
and for each servant they transported to Virginia.
Up to that point, Jamestown had been a colony
made up mostly of men. In 1619 the Virginia
Company sent about 90 women to the colony. The
first Africans also arrived in 1619 when a slave ship
stopped to trade. The settlers purchased 20 Africans
as “Christian servants,” not enslaved people. The
Africans had been baptized, and at that time English
law said that Christians could not be enslaved.
Virginia Becomes a Royal Colony The new policies triggered a wave of immigration. By 1622 more
than 4,500 settlers had arrived in Virginia. The dramatic increase in settlers alarmed the Native
Americans. In March 1622, they attacked Jamestown,
burning homes and killing nearly 350 settlers. The
settlers eventually put an end to the uprising, but the
colony was devastated. The uprising was the final
straw for King James. An English court revoked the
company’s charter, and Virginia became a royal
colony run by a governor appointed by the king.
Reading Check Describing How did Captain John
Smith and the Powhatan Confederacy save Jamestown?
Maryland Is Founded
A joint-stock company had founded Virginia, but
the colony north of it resulted from the aspirations of
one man, George Calvert, Lord Baltimore. Lord
Baltimore had been a member of the English
Parliament until he converted to Catholicism. This
decision ruined his career, but he remained a good
friend of King James I and his son, Charles I.
Catholics were opposed in England for much the
same reason as Puritans. Catholics did not accept
the king as head of the Church, nor did they accept
the authority of Anglican bishops and priests. They
were viewed as potential traitors who might help
Catholic countries overthrow the English king.
Consequently, they were forbidden to practice law or
teach school.
As he watched the persecution of his fellow
Catholics, Lord Baltimore decided to found a colony
where Catholics could practice their religion. In 1632
King Charles granted him a large area of land northeast of Virginia. Baltimore named the new colony
Maryland.
Baltimore owned Maryland, making it England’s
first proprietary colony. The proprietor, or owner,
could govern the colony any way he wished. He
could appoint officials, coin money, impose taxes,
establish courts, grant lands, and create towns. In
most respects, he had a king’s powers.
Lord Baltimore died shortly before settlers arrived
in his colony. In 1634, 20 gentlemen, mostly Catholic,
and 200 servants and artisans, mostly Protestant,
arrived in Maryland. Despite Baltimore’s hope that
Maryland would become a Catholic refuge, most of
its settlers were Protestant, although the government
officials and most large estate owners were Catholic.
The friction between the two groups plagued the
colony for many years.
Reading Check Analyzing Why did Lord Baltimore
found Maryland?
Checking for Understanding
Critical Thinking
Analyzing Visuals
1. Define: Puritan, joint-stock company,
privateer, burgesses, headright,
proprietary colony.
2. Identify: John Cabot, Walter Raleigh,
Powhatan Confederacy.
3. Explain how tobacco saved Jamestown.
5. Interpreting What caused friction in
the Maryland colony?
6. Categorizing Use a graphic organizer
similar to the one below to list three
ways the Virginia Company tried to
attract settlers to the Jamestown colony.
7. Analyzing Art Examine the painting
on pages 60 and 61. What factors contributed to the growing rivalry between
Spain and England?
Reviewing Themes
4. Geography and History How did the
enclosure movement change England’s
society?
64
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
Ways to Attract Settlers
Writing About History
8. Persuasive Writing Take on the role
of Captain John Smith of Jamestown.
Write a town circular explaining to your
fellow colonists why trading with the
Powhatan Confederacy is a good survival strategy.
Social Studies
Understanding the Parts of a Map
Why Learn This Skill?
The Thirteen Colonies, 1750
Maps can direct you down the street or around
the world. There are as many different kinds of
maps as there are uses for them. Being able to read
a map begins with learning about its parts.
N.H.
Salem
Boston Plymouth
N.Y.
MASS.
Hartford
R.I.
New Haven
Learning the Skill
Maps usually include a key, a compass rose, and
a scale bar. The map key explains the meaning of
special colors, symbols, and lines used on the map.
On a road map, for example, the key tells what
map lines stand for paved roads, dirt roads, and
interstate highways.
After reading the map key, look for the compass
rose. It is the direction marker that shows the cardinal directions of north, south, east, and west. A
measuring line, often called a scale bar, helps you
estimate distance on a map. The map’s scale tells
you what distance on the earth is represented by
the measurement on the scale bar. For example,
1 inch (2.54 cm) on the map may represent 100 miles
(160.9 km) on the earth. Knowing the scale allows
you to visualize the extent of an area and to measure
distances.
Practicing the Skill
The map on this page shows the early English
colonization of the eastern coast of North America.
Look at the parts of the map, and then answer the
questions.
1 What information is given in the key?
2 What body of water serves as the eastern border for the colonies?
3 What color represents the Middle Colonies?
4 What is the approximate distance, in miles,
between the settlements of Charles Town and
Jamestown?
5 What is the approximate distance, in kilometers, between the northernmost and southernmost settlements?
ME.
(part of
Mass.)
Lake
Ontario
k
La
0
ri e
eE
PA.
Philadelphia
200 miles
200 kilometers
0
Lambert Equal-Area
projection
St. Mary's
VA.
N.C.
CONN.
New York City
40°N
N.J.
DEL.
MD.
Jamestown
ATLaNTIC
OCEaN
N
E
W
S
70°W
Town or City
S.C.
Charles Town
GA.
Savannah
New England Colonies
Middle Colonies
Southern Colonies
60°W
30°N
Skills Assessment
Complete the Practicing Skills questions on
page 81 and the Chapter 2 Skill Reinforcement
Activity to assess your mastery of this skill.
Applying the Skill
Understanding the Parts of a Map Study the map of
European Explorations and Settlements on page 59.
Use the map to answer the following questions.
1. When did Marquette and Joliet explore the
Mississippi River?
2. What English explorer arrived in North America at
the end of the 1400s?
3. Which explorer traveled the farthest north?
Glencoe’s Skillbuilder Interactive Workbook
CD-ROM, Level 2, provides instruction and
practice in key social studies skills.
65
New England
Main Idea
Reading Strategy
Reading Objectives
In the 1600s, English Puritans fleeing religious persecution and economic difficulties founded several colonies in New
England.
Organizing As you read about the
founding of colonies in New England,
complete a graphic organizer similar to
the one below by listing the causes of
King Philip’s War.
• Discuss why John Winthrop founded
Massachusetts and describe the kind of
society the Puritans built there.
• Describe why Roger Williams and Anne
Hutchinson left the Massachusetts
colony.
Key Terms and Names
Separatist, Pilgrim, William Bradford,
Squanto, John Winthrop, Massachusetts
Bay Company, Great Migration, heretic,
Roger Williams, Anne Hutchinson
✦1620
Section Theme
Causes of
King Philip’s War
Culture and Traditions Puritan religious
beliefs shaped the cultural history of New
England.
✦1640
1620
Pilgrims arrive in
Massachusetts
1630
Massachusetts Bay
Colony established
The Mayflower, anchored in
Plymouth harbor
✦1660
1636
Roger Williams founds
Providence
1639
Fundamental Orders of
Connecticut introduced
✦1680
1675
King Philip’s
War begins
On a bleak November day in 1620, a tiny three-masted English ship named
the Mayflower dropped anchor off the coast of Cape Cod. The eyes of all those
aboard, 101 English men, women, and children, focused on the low strip of
land before them. They were not where they were supposed to be. They had a
patent for land in Virginia, but the land on the horizon was clearly not Virginia.
If they went ashore, they would be on land to which they had no title in a territory where no English government existed.
On November 11, 1620, 41 adult men met in the ship’s cabin to sign a
document later known as the Mayflower Compact. In it they declared their
intention to create a government and obey its laws. They agreed to “solemnly and mutually
in the presence of God and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together in a
civil body politic, for our better ordering and preservation,” and to “frame such just and equal
laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions and officers, from time to time, as shall be thought most
meet and convenient for the general good of the Colony, unto which we promise all due submission and obedience.”
—adapted from Basic Documents in American History
The Pilgrims Land at Plymouth
The events that led to the arrival of the Mayflower off the coast of New England began
several years earlier in England. A group of Puritans, called Separatists, broke away
from the Anglican Church to form their own congregations. King James I viewed this
66
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
action as a challenge to his authority, and he imprisoned Separatist leaders. To escape this persecution,
one group fled to Holland in 1608. These Separatists,
who came to be known as the Pilgrims, found it difficult to live in Holland. They also worried that their
children were losing their English heritage. In early
1617, the congregation decided to sail to America.
The Mayflower Arrives in America Before setting
sail for America, the Pilgrims first returned to England,
where they joined another group of Separatists aboard
the Mayflower. In September 1620, 102 passengers set
off on the journey across the Atlantic. The trip took 65
days. Most of the food ran out, many passengers
became ill, and one died. Making matters worse, a
severe storm blew the small ship off course. Finally, in
early November, the Pilgrims sighted Cape Cod and
tried to follow the coastline south. After encountering
rough weather, they turned back.
Although they were not where they expected, the
Pilgrims were not completely lost. In 1614 the
Virginia Company had hired Captain John Smith to
explore the region. The Pilgrims had a copy of
Smith’s “Map of New England,” and they decided to
move across Massachusetts Bay to the area Smith had
labeled “Plymouth” on his map. ; (See page 1061 for an
excerpt from the Mayflower Compact.)
Plymouth Colony
The Puritans Found Massachusetts
Although many Puritans in England shared the
frustrations that had driven the Pilgrims to leave the
country, most worked for reform within the
Anglican Church. After King Charles took the throne
in 1625, opposition to the Puritans began to increase,
and many Puritans became willing to leave
England.
A City on a Hill At about this time, a depression
struck England’s wool industry, which caused high
unemployment, particularly in England’s southeastern counties where many Puritans lived. As he
watched his fellow Puritans suffering religious and
economic hardship, John Winthrop, a wealthy attorney, wrote despairingly to his wife: “I am verily persuaded God will bring some heavy affliction upon
this land, and that speedily.”
Winthrop and several other wealthy Puritans were
stockholders in the Massachusetts Bay Company.
The company had already received a royal charter in
March 1629 to create a colony in New England.
Convinced that there was no future for Puritans in
England, Winthrop decided to change what had been
merely a business investment into a refuge for
Puritans in America. Other Puritans embraced the
idea, and in March 1630, eleven ships carrying about
900 settlers set sail. As they headed to America, John
Winthrop delivered a sermon entitled “A Model of
According to William Bradford,
one of the colony’s leaders, the Pilgrims went to
work as soon as they arrived at Plymouth.
After constructing a “common house,” the
settlers built modest homes of frame construction and thatched roofs. Soon, however, a plague swept through the colony,
sparing only 50 settlers.
Even the surviving Pilgrims might have
perished were it not for the help of Squanto,
a Native American man who taught them
about their new environment. Bradford
wrote that Squanto “directed them how to
set their corn, where to take fish and [how]
to procure other commodities.” Squanto
also helped the Pilgrims negotiate a peace
treaty with the Wampanoag people who
lived nearby. The following autumn, the
Pilgrims joined the Wampanoag in a threeday festival to celebrate the harvest and give
thanks to God for their good fortune. This
History Through Art
celebration later became the basis for the
Solemn Signing Tompkins Matteson, a nineteenth-century artist, painted his vision of the
Thanksgiving holiday.
Reading Check Summarizing How did
Squanto help the Pilgrims?
signing of the Mayflower Compact. By signing this document, the Pilgrims wanted to set up a
legal basis for their new colony. How did the artist try to suggest the seriousness of the
occasion in this painting?
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
67
The Great Migration, 1620–1646
30°W
60°W
0
1,000 kilometers
Mercator projection
NEW ENGLAND
1620
MARYLAND
1645
VIRGINIA
1635
BERMUDA
1642
T
0°
N
1,000 miles
0
E
W
ENGLAND
S
2
00
s,
d, 20,0
nd
nglan
E
a
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e
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00
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BAHAMAS
1646
ST. CROIX, 1625
ST. KITTS, 1623
NEVIS, 1628
TROPIC OF CANCER
ATLaNTIC
OCEaN
Immigration Route
BARBADOS, 1625
The Puritan by Augustus
Saint-Gaudens
Christian Charity.” The new colony, Winthrop told
his fellow Puritans, would be an example to the
world:
“
The Lord will make our name a praise and glory,
so that men shall say of succeeding plantations: ‘The
Lord make it like that of New England.’ For we must
consider that we shall be like a City upon a Hill; the
eyes of all people are on us.
”
By the end of the year, 17 ships had brought
another 1,000 settlers, and Massachusetts rapidly
expanded. Several towns were founded, including
Boston, which became the colony’s capital. As conditions in England grew worse, many people began to
leave the country in what was later called the Great
Migration. By 1643 an estimated 20,000 settlers had
arrived in New England.
Church and State The charter of the Massachusetts
Bay Company defined the colony’s government.
People who owned stock in the company were called
“freemen.” All of the freemen together were called
the General Court. The General Court made the laws
and elected the governor.
John Winthrop had been chosen to be the first
governor. To ensure that the colony became the kind
of society he wanted, Winthrop ignored the charter
68
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
1. Interpreting Maps How many settlers immigrated to
the Chesapeake Colonies as compared to New England?
2. Applying Geography Skills Approximately how many
miles was the migration route from England to the New
England Colonies?
and told the settlers that only the governor and his
assistants could make laws for the colony. No one
knew that these rules were not in the charter because
Winthrop kept the charter locked in a chest.
Winthrop managed to restrict the freemen’s power
for four years, but eventually the settlers grew frustrated with how little voice they had in governing the
colony. In 1634 town representatives demanded to
see the charter, and Winthrop had no basis to refuse
the request. As they read the charter, the representatives realized that the General Court was supposed
to make the laws. When the General Court assembled in May 1634, they reorganized the government.
The General Court became a representative assembly.
They decided that elections would be held each year,
and the freemen of each town would elect up to three
deputies to send to the General Court.
John Winthrop believed that each congregation
should control its own church, but he also believed
that the government should help the church. Laws
were passed requiring everyone to attend church.
The government collected taxes to support the
church and also regulated behavior. Gambling,
“we shall be
like a City upon
a Hill”
—John Winthrop
blasphemy, adultery, and drunkenness were all illegal and punished severely, often by flogging.
The leaders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony tried
to prevent religious ideas that differed from Puritan
beliefs. If settlers publicly challenged Puritan ideas,
they could be charged with heresy and banished
from the colony. Heretics—people whose religious
beliefs differ from those accepted by the majority—
were considered a threat to the community.
Reading Check Analyzing How did John
Winthrop’s religious beliefs affect the way the Massachusetts
Bay Colony was governed?
Rhode Island and Religious Dissent
Puritan efforts to suppress other religious beliefs
inevitably led to conflict with those who disagreed
with them. Eventually, just as Anglican intolerance of
the Puritans led to the founding of Massachusetts,
Puritan intolerance led to the founding of other
colonies in New England.
Roger Williams Founds Providence In 1631 a
young minister named Roger Williams arrived in
Boston. When the Boston congregation offered him a
teaching position, Williams refused, saying he
“[would] not officiate to an unseparated people.”
Williams was a strict Separatist. He believed Puritans
corrupted themselves by remaining as part of the
Anglican Church.
Williams became a teacher in Salem, where
Separatist ideas were more accepted, but his continuing condemnation of the Puritan churches angered
many people. As pressure against him mounted,
Williams decided to move to Plymouth Colony.
While in Plymouth, he declared that the land
belonged to the Native Americans and that the king
did not have the right to give it away.
Williams’s ideas greatly alarmed John Winthrop. If
the king heard that Puritans in Massachusetts were
denying the king’s authority, he might revoke the charter and impose a royal government. Winthrop feared
that if that happened, the Puritans would lose control
of their churches.
When Williams returned to Massachusetts in 1633,
he continued to challenge Puritan authority. In
October 1635, the General Court ordered him to leave
the colony. Williams then headed south to found his
own colony. He purchased land from the
Narragansett people and founded the town of
Providence. In Providence, the government had no
authority in religious matters. Different religious
beliefs were tolerated rather than suppressed.
Anne Hutchinson Is Banished In the midst of the
uproar over Roger Williams, a woman named Anne
Hutchinson arrived in Boston. Hutchinson was intelligent, charismatic, and widely admired. A devout
Puritan, Hutchinson began to hold prayer meetings in
her home. Her groups discussed sermons and compared ministers.
As Hutchinson’s following grew, she began to
claim to know which ministers had salvation from
God and which did not. This created a problem for
Puritan leaders. Hutchinson was attacking the
authority of ministers. If people believed her, they
would stop listening to the ministers she had condemned. In late 1637, the General Court called
Hutchinson before them to answer to charges of
heresy.
When questioned by the court, Hutchinson did not
confess or repent. She said that God “hath let me see
which was the clear [correct] ministry and which the
wrong. . . .” When asked how God let her know, she
replied that God spoke to her “by an immediate revelation.” By claiming God spoke to her directly,
Hutchinson contradicted the Puritan belief that God
only spoke through the Bible. The General Court
immediately banished her for heresy. Hutchinson and
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
69
New England Colonies
L
r
aw
en
ce
R.
St
.
NEW
FRANCE
The River Towns of Connecticut
N
MAINE
(Part of MASS.)
45°N
S
Hud
Conn e c
N.Y.
son R.
ticu
tR
.
Lake
Champlain
E
W
N.H.
MASS.
Portsmouth, 1624
Salem, 1626
Massachusetts Bay
Boston, 1630
Plymouth, 1620
Hartford, 1636
CONN. Providence, 1636
New Haven,
1638
R.I.
Long
Island
N.J.
40°N
75°W
70°W
0
Atlantic
Ocean
100 miles
100 kilometers
0
Albers Conic Equal-Area projection
1. Interpreting Maps How long after the establishment of
Plymouth Colony was Boston founded?
2. Applying Geography Skills Which English settlement
was not located directly on the coast?
several of her followers headed south. They settled on
an island and founded the town of Pocasset, later
known as Portsmouth.
The Colony of Rhode Island
Over the next few
years, Massachusetts banished other dissenting
Puritans. They too headed south and founded two
more towns—Newport in 1639 and Warwick in 1643.
In 1644 these two towns joined together with
Portsmouth and Providence to become the colony of
Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. Religious
freedom, with a total separation of church and state,
was a key part of the colony’s charter.
Reading Check Explaining Why were Roger
Williams and Anne Hutchinson banished from Massachusetts?
70
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
In 1636 the Reverend Thomas Hooker asked the
General Court of Massachusetts for permission to
move his entire congregation to the Connecticut
River valley. His congregation wanted to migrate
because they did not have enough land near their
town to raise cattle. Hooker also had his own reasons
for leaving. Unlike Roger Williams, Hooker was an
orthodox Puritan, but like Williams, he was frustrated by the Massachusetts political system. He
thought that everyone should be allowed to vote, not
just church members. Hooker argued that “the foundation of authority is laid in the consent of the governed,” and that “the choice of the magistrate
belongs to the people.”
The General Court allowed Hooker and his congregation to migrate. A few months later, some 100
settlers headed to the Connecticut River and founded
the town of Hartford. Hooker’s congregation was not
alone in the Connecticut River valley. Trading posts
had been established in the region in 1633, and two
other congregations had founded the towns of
Windsor and Wethersfield in 1634.
In 1637 the towns joined together to create their
own General Court. Two years later they adopted a
constitution known as the Fundamental Orders of
Connecticut—the first written constitution of the
American colonies. Their government was similar to
that of Massachusetts, but it had one major exception:
it allowed all adult men, not just church members, to
elect the governor and the General Court. ; (See
page 1062 for the text of the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut.)
East of the Connecticut River lived the Pequot
people, who considered the valley part of their territory. The Pequot chief Sassacus, who ruled both the
Pequot and the Mohegan peoples, tolerated the
English settlers at first because he needed allies
against the Narraganset in Rhode Island. In 1636,
however, two Massachusetts traders were killed in
Pequot territory. When Massachusetts sent troops to
retaliate, the Pequot War erupted. The Pequot began
raiding towns along the Connecticut River. In April
1637, they surprised the town of Wethersfield and
killed nine people. Furious, the Connecticut settlers
assembled an army under the command of Captain
John Mason. Seizing the opportunity to free themselves, the Mohegan rebelled against the Pequot and
sent warriors to fight alongside Mason’s troops. The
Narraganset, bitter rivals of the Pequot, also joined in
the attack.
Mason’s troops and their Native American allies
set fire to the main Pequot fort near Mystic Harbor.
When the Pequot tried to surrender, the troops
opened fire, killing about 400 people, including
women and children. The Connecticut General Court
then put a bounty on the surviving Pequot. Many
were captured and sold into slavery, while others
were given to the Narraganset and Mohegan as war
prizes. The Pequot were treated so poorly by the
other Native Americans that in 1655, the Connecticut
government resettled the survivors in two villages
near the Mystic River.
Reading Check Contrasting How did the
Connecticut and Massachusetts constitutions differ?
New Hampshire and Maine
Not all of the settlers who left Massachusetts
headed for Rhode Island or Connecticut. Although
Anne Hutchinson had moved south, 36 of her followers headed north and founded the town of
Exeter. During the 1640s, several other towns were
also established north of Massachusetts. Many of
the settlers in these towns were fishers and fur
traders.
Much of the territory north of Massachusetts had
been granted to two men, Sir Fernando Gorges and
Captain John Mason who split the grant in half.
Mason took the southern part and named it New
Hampshire, while Gorges’s territory in the north
came to be called Maine. The government of
Massachusetts claimed both New Hampshire and
Maine and challenged the claims of Mason and
Gorges in court. In 1677 an English court ruled
against Massachusetts. Two years later, New
Hampshire became a royal colony. Massachusetts,
Checking for Understanding
1. Define: Separatist, Pilgrim, heretic.
2. Identify: William Bradford, Squanto,
John Winthrop, Massachusetts Bay
Company, Great Migration, Roger
Williams, Anne Hutchinson.
3. Explain Why was John Winthrop concerned about the ideas of Roger
Williams?
Reviewing Themes
4. Culture and Traditions How did
Thomas Hooker’s beliefs promote the
idea of separation of church and state?
however, bought Maine from Gorges’s heirs, and
Maine remained part of Massachusetts until 1820.
Reading Check Identifying What two colonies
were established north of Massachusetts?
TURNING POINT
King Philip’s War
For almost 40 years after the Pequot War, the New
England settlers and Native Americans had good relations. The fur trade, in particular, facilitated peace. It
enabled Native Americans to acquire tools, guns,
metal, and other European products in exchange for
furs. By the 1670s, however, the fur trade was in
decline. At the same time, colonial governments began
to demand that Native Americans follow English laws
and customs. Such demands angered Native
Americans, who felt that the English were trying to
destroy their way of life.
Tensions peaked in 1675 when Plymouth Colony
arrested, tried, and executed three Wampanoag for a
murder. Angry and frustrated, Wampanoag warriors
attacked the town of Swansea. This marked the beginning of what came to be called King Philip’s War, after
the Wampanoag leader Metacomet, whom the settlers
called King Philip. Metacomet was killed in 1676, but
fighting continued in Maine and New Hampshire. The
war, which the settlers won in 1678, was a turning
point. Afterward, few Native Americans remained in
New England, and those who survived were scattered.
New England now belonged to the English settlers.
Reading Check Analyzing In what way was King
Philip’s War a turning point for Native Americans and settlers in
New England?
Critical Thinking
5. Comparing In what ways were the
causes and effects of the Pequot War
and King Philip’s War similar?
6. Categorizing Use a graphic organizer
similar to the one below to list the New
England Colonies and the reasons for
their founding.
Colony
Reasons Founded
Analyzing Visuals
7. Analyzing Art Study the painting of
the signing of the Mayflower Compact
on page 67. Why did the Pilgrims feel
it was necessary to create their own
government?
Writing About History
8. Descriptive Writing Imagine you are a
Pilgrim in Plymouth Colony. Write a letter to your friends in Europe describing
your first few weeks in the new land.
Explain what you hope your life will be
like here.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
71
The Middle and
Southern Colonies
Main Idea
Reading Strategy
Reading Objectives
After the English Civil War, economic,
strategic, and religious factors led to the
founding of seven new English colonies
along the Atlantic seaboard.
Organizing As you read about the colonization of the Middle and Southern
Colonies, complete a graphic organizer
similar to the one below by listing ways
that proprietors attracted people to settle
in the colonies.
• Discuss the ideas of William Penn and
the Quakers, and describe the founding
of Pennsylvania and Delaware.
• Summarize why the English colonies
succeeded.
Key Terms and Names
English Civil War, Oliver Cromwell,
Maryland Toleration Act, Restoration,
Henry Hudson, William Penn, pacifism,
James Oglethorpe
✦1650
Ways to
Attract Settlers
✦1675
1642
English Civil War
begins
1660
English monarchy
restored
1664
English capture New
Amsterdam
Section Theme
Global Connections After the English
Civil War, England resumed colonizing
America, eventually establishing seven
new colonies.
✦1700
1681
William Penn receives
charter for Pennsylvania
✦1725
1733
First English settlers
arrive in Georgia
On August 26, 1664, an English fleet arrived near the Dutch town of New Amsterdam. Its
commander sent a note to Governor Peter Stuyvesant of New Netherland, demanding that the
town surrender. Stuyvesant bellowed that he would rather “be carried out dead in his coffin.”
Badly outnumbered, however, leading Dutch citizens petitioned the governor to surrender:
We, your sorrowful community and subjects, [believe] that we cannot conscientiously
“
foresee that anything else is to be expected . . . than misery, sorrow, conflagration, the dishonor of women . . . and, in a word, the absolute ruin and destruction of about fifteen hundred innocent souls, only two hundred and fifty of whom are capable of bearing arms. . . .
”
Two days later, Stuyvesant watched two English warships approach. Beside him stood a gunner, ready to fire. The minister at New Amsterdam talked urgently to the governor, then led
him away. On September 8, the Dutch surrendered, and New Amsterdam became New York.
Peter Stuyvesant
—adapted from A New World and Colonial New York
The English Civil War and the Colonies
The fall of New Amsterdam and the founding of New York in 1664 marked the beginning of a new wave of English colonization. For more than 20 years, no new English
colonies had been founded in America because the struggle between the Puritans and
the English king had finally led to war.
72
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
The English Civil War began in 1642, when King
Charles I sent troops into the English Parliament to
arrest several Puritan leaders. Parliament, which was
dominated by Puritans, responded by organizing its
own army, and a civil war began. In 1646
Parliament’s army defeated the king’s troops and
captured King Charles. Two and a half years later, a
Parliamentary court tried King Charles and condemned him to death. Oliver Cromwell, the commander of Parliament’s army, then dissolved
Parliament and seized power, giving himself the title
“Lord Protector of England.”
The Colonies Choose Sides
Once the English
Civil War began, England’s colonies had to decide
whether to support the king or Parliament. In
Virginia, the governor and the House of Burgesses
supported the king until 1652, when a fleet sent by
Parliament forced them to change sides.
Across Chesapeake Bay from Virginia, Maryland
experienced its own civil war. Lord Baltimore,
Maryland’s proprietor, had supported the king
against Parliament, as had Maryland’s governor. In
1644 Protestants in Maryland rebelled. To calm
things down, Lord Baltimore appointed a Protestant
as governor and introduced the Maryland Toleration
Act in 1649. The act granted religious toleration to all
Christians in Maryland and was intended to protect
the Catholic minority from the Protestants.
In New England, the English Civil War was a time
for rejoicing. The Puritan colonies backed
Parliament, and their populations fell as settlers
headed home to fight in the war.
Colonization Resumes After nearly 20 years of turmoil, England’s leaders longed for stability. When
Cromwell died in 1658, no strong leader stepped forward to replace him. England’s leaders decided to
restore the monarchy that had been abruptly ended
with the execution of King Charles I. In the spring of
1660, Parliament invited Charles’s son, Charles II, to
take the throne. This became known as the
Restoration.
With the king back on the throne, a new round of
colonization began in America. From this point forward, the English government took the lead in promoting colonization. Colonies were no longer seen as
risky business ventures. English leaders now viewed
them as vital sources of raw materials and as markets
for manufactured goods.
Reading Check Examining What started the English
Civil War?
History
Puritan General Oliver Cromwell directed Parliament’s troops in the
English Civil War. What in his appearance suggests that he was a Puritan?
New Netherland
Becomes New York
As King Charles II and his advisers studied the situation in North America, two regions attracted their
interest. The first region was south of Virginia, and
the second was located between Maryland and
Connecticut. Taking control of the latter area would
link Virginia and Maryland to New England.
Unfortunately, the Dutch had already claimed much
of that land. If the English wanted the region, they
would have to take it from the Dutch.
The History of New Netherland
In 1609 the Dutch
East India Company hired an English navigator
named Henry Hudson to find a route through North
America to the Pacific. Hudson found a wide river,
today known as the Hudson River. His report convinced many Dutch merchants that the Hudson
River valley was rich in fur-bearing animals. They
claimed the region, calling it New Netherland, and
they established fur-trading posts there in 1614.
The Dutch located their major settlement, New
Amsterdam, on Manhattan Island. According to tradition, the Dutch bought Manhattan Island from the
local people for 60 florins (about 24 dollars) worth of
goods. As in New France, the emphasis on the fur
trade kept the Dutch colony from growing quickly.
As late as 1646, New Netherland had only 1,500
people, compared to 25,000 in New England.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
73
To increase the colony’s size, the Dutch allowed
anyone to buy land in the colony. Soon settlers from
many countries began to move to New Netherland.
By 1664 the colony had over 10,000 people. Settlers
came from France, Germany, Poland, Spain, Italy,
and other parts of Europe. A group of Portuguese
Jews moved to New Amsterdam and founded one of
the first synagogues in North America.
The need for labor brought unwilling immigrants
to the colony as well, when Dutch merchants entered
the slave trade. The first enslaved Africans arrived in
New Netherland in the 1620s. By 1664 Africans made
up 10 percent of the population.
New York and New Jersey
By the time King
Charles II took the throne in 1660, the Dutch controlled a large portion of the fur trade. They also
had begun helping English colonists smuggle
tobacco to Europe and illegally import European
products. In 1664 King Charles decided that the
time had come to seize New Netherland. In March,
Charles granted all the land from Delaware Bay to
the Connecticut River to his brother James, the
Duke of York. James was lord high admiral for the
History Through Art
The Beginnings of Pennsylvania William
Penn began his colony by signing a treaty with
Native Americans who lived in the region. Penn
also granted parts of his land to other settlers,
as seen in this formal land deed (right). In the
painting, what are the colonists giving the
Native Americans in return for their land?
74
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
king, and he quickly dispatched four warships to
seize New Netherland from the Dutch.
After seizing New Netherland, now named New
York, James granted a large portion of his land to two
of the king’s closest advisers, Sir George Carteret and
Lord John Berkeley. James named the new colony
New Jersey, in honor of Sir George Carteret, who was
from the island of Jersey. To attract settlers, the proprietors offered generous land grants, religious freedom, and the right to elect a legislative assembly.
These terms convinced a large number of settlers,
many of them Puritans, to head to New Jersey.
Reading Check Summarizing Why did King
Charles II want to seize New Netherland from the Dutch?
Pennsylvania and Delaware
Admiral William Penn was another close friend of
King Charles. Penn had loaned ships and money to
King Charles but died before the king could pay back
the money he owed him.
Admiral Penn’s son, who was also named William
Penn, inherited his father’s estate, including the
The Middle Colonies, c. 1700
money the king owed his father. In 1680 William Penn
petitioned the king for a grant of land between New
York and Maryland to settle the debt. The request put
the king in a dilemma. Although granting a colony
was a cheap way to pay off the debt, the young man
belonged to a religious group Charles had banned and
persecuted. William Penn was a Quaker.
The “Holy Experiment”
William Penn was one of
the few wealthy Quakers and a good friend of King
Charles. Penn became involved in Quaker attempts to
create a colony in the 1670s, when he and other
Quakers bought New Jersey from Berkeley and
Carteret. Many Quakers moved to New Jersey, but
Penn did not think it was the best solution since the
Puritan settlers there were hostile to Quakers. In 1680
Penn asked King Charles for his own colony across the
Delaware River from New Jersey. Charles agreed but
insisted that the new colony be called Pennsylvania
(or Penn’s Woods) in honor of William Penn’s father.
Penn regarded Pennsylvania as a “holy experiment” where complete political and religious freedom would be practiced. He also believed that
Native Americans had been treated unjustly in other
colonies, and he resolved to win the friendship of
those who lived in Pennsylvania.
In late 1682, Penn made good on his word when he
signed the Treaty of Shackamaxon, in which the
Lenni Lenape, a Native American group, ceded land
to the colonists. The treaty marked the beginning of
over 70 years of peace in Pennsylvania between the
European settlers and the Native Americans. On the
land ceded by the Lenni Lenape, Penn built the capital of his new colony and named it Philadelphia, or
“the city of brotherly love.”
Penn also prepared a constitution, or “frame of government,” for his colony. His initial constitution
N.H.
Albany, 1624
Lake
Erie
N.Y.
N
D
E
W
S
PENN.
ware R.
ela
Quakers believed that everyone had
their own “inner light” from God. There was no need
for a church or ministers. Even the Bible had less
authority than a person’s inner light. Quakers
objected to all political and religious authority,
including forcing people to pay taxes or serve in the
military. They advocated pacifism—opposition to
war or violence as a means to settle disputes.
Quaker beliefs put them into conflict with the government as well as other religions. To escape opposition, many Quakers fled to America, but they were
persecuted in almost every colony. This convinced
the Quakers that they needed their own colony, but
they probably would never have been granted one
had it not been for William Penn.
Lake Ontario
Trenton, 1679
Wilmington, 1638
0
MASS.
Hudson R.
The Quakers
Area claimed
by New York
and New
Hampshire
CONN.
N.J.
40°N
Philadelphia, 1682
Atlantic
Ocean
150 miles
0
150 kilometers
Albers Conic Equal-Area projection
R.I.
New York City
(New Amsterdam),
1626
DEL.
74°W
38°N
72°W
1. Interpreting Maps What four colonies made up the
Middle Colonies?
2. Applying Geography Skills The area claimed by New
York and New Hampshire became which state?
allowed anyone who owned land or paid taxes to
vote, but it was confusing in structure. After several
confrontations with settlers over the government’s
structure, Penn issued a new charter establishing a
legislative assembly elected directly by the voters. The
proprietor appointed the governor. The charter gave
the right to vote to all colonists who owned 50 acres of
land and professed a faith in Jesus Christ. Despite this
example of discrimination against non-Christians, the
charter guaranteed all Pennsylvanians the right to
practice their religion without interference.
Penn also made land readily available to settlers, a
HISTORY
practice that attracted thousands of colonists. Many
Student Web
were English Quakers, but
Activity Visit the
large numbers of Germans
American Vision Web
and Scots-Irish migrated to
site at tav.glencoe.com
the colony as well. By 1684
and click on Student
Pennsylvania had over 7,000
Web Activities—
colonists, and by 1700
Chapter 2 for an
Philadelphia rivaled Boston
activity on the founding
and New York City as a cenof Pennsylvania.
ter for trade and commerce.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
75
In 1682, as Penn began to build his colony, he bought
three counties south of Pennsylvania from the Duke of
York. These “lower counties” later became the colony
of Delaware.
Reading Check Evaluating Why did William Penn
regard Pennsylvania as a “holy experiment”?
New Southern Colonies
King Charles and his advisers were very interested in the land south of Virginia. The year before he
granted New York to his brother James, Charles II
awarded a vast territory south of Virginia to eight
other friends and political allies. The land was
named Carolina, from the Latin version of “Charles.”
The Southern Colonies, c. 1733
PENN.
N.J.
N
E
W
s R.
me
Richmond, 1645
Williamsburg, 1633
Norfolk,
1682
Roanoke R
.
36°N
AP
PA
LA
CH
S
38°N
N.C.
Wilmington,
1730
34°N
76°W
S.C.
Sa
va
nn
ah
Georgetown, 1665
R.
Charles Town, 1670
32°N
GA.
Altamaha R.
0
150 miles
0
150 kilometers
Albers Conic Equal-Area projection
From the beginning, Carolina
developed as two separate regions. North Carolina
was home to a small and scattered population. Most
of the settlers were farmers who began drifting into
the region from Virginia in the 1650s.
North Carolina did not have a good harbor, and
the coastline, protected by the Outer Banks, was very
hard for ships to reach. As a result, the colony grew
very slowly, and by 1700 only 3,000 people lived in
the region. Eventually North Carolina farmers began
growing tobacco. They also began to export naval
supplies such as tar, pitch, and turpentine.
South Carolina
The proprietors who had been
granted Carolina were never interested in the northern part of the colony. South Carolina, on the other
hand, was believed to be suitable for growing sugarcane. The first settlers arrived in South Carolina in
1670. They named their settlement Charles Town
(today called Charleston), after King Charles.
Sugarcane, it turned out, did not grow well in this
region. The first product South Carolina exported in
large quantity was deerskin, which had become popular for leather in England. The colony also began to
capture Native Americans and ship them to the
Caribbean, where the demand for enslaved workers
was high.
VA.
Ja
Ohio
R.
IAN M
O U N TA I N
S
MD. Baltimore, 1729
DEL.
North Carolina
Savannah, 1733
Atlantic
Ocean
80°W
78°W
1. Interpreting Maps What five colonies made up the
Southern Colonies?
2. Applying Geography Skills What natural barrier served
as the western border of the Southern Colonies?
30°N
The Georgia Experiment
In the 1720s, General
James Oglethorpe, a wealthy member of Parliament,
was appalled to find that many people in England
were in prison simply because they could not pay
their debts. He asked King George II for a colony
south of Carolina where the poor could start over.
The English government saw advantages to a new
southern colony. It might help England’s poor, and it
would provide a strategic buffer between South
Carolina and Spanish Florida. King George granted
Oglethorpe and 19 other trustees permission in 1732
to settle a region between the Savannah and
Altamaha Rivers. The new colony was named
Georgia, in honor of the king. Oglethorpe led the first
settlers to the mouth of the Savannah River in 1733.
The Georgia trustees banned slavery, rum, and
brandy in the new colony and limited land grants to
500 acres. The colony attracted settlers from all over
Europe, including Scots, Welsh, Germans, Swiss,
Italians, and a few Portuguese Jews.
Increasingly the settlers objected to the colony’s
rules. In the 1740s, the trustees lifted restrictions on
brandy, rum, and slavery; in 1750 they granted the
settlers an elected assembly. In 1751 Georgia became
a royal colony.
Comparing European Colonies in the Americas, c. 1700
Colony
Early Settlement
Population
Areas Where
Concentrated
Political and Economic
Organization
Economic
Focus
1490s–early 1500s
Between 5–7
million
(including
conquered
Native
Americans)
Mexico, Florida, Texas,
Central America, the
Caribbean, California,
New Mexico, north and
west coast of South
America
Governors with
strong links to Spain;
large bureaucracy;
encomiendas and
haciendas
Gold, silver
mining;
ranching
1490s–early explorers;
early 1600s–permanent
settlements
250,000
Eastern seaboard of
North America
Governors with weak
links to English Crown;
elected assemblies;
small farms; plantations;
private merchants
Trade and
farming
1535–early explorers;
1670s–permanent
settlements
15,000
St. Lawrence River;
Louisiana territory;
outposts on Great
Lakes and
Mississippi River
Strong governors;
large estates
Exporting furs
Spanish
English
French
England’s American Colonies
By 1775 England’s
colonies in North America were home to a growing
population of roughly 2.5 million people. Despite the
stumbling start in Jamestown, the English had succeeded in building a large and prosperous society on
the east coast of North America. England’s success,
however, proved to be its own undoing. The English
government had permitted new patterns of land ownership, new types of worship, and new kinds of government in its colonies. Once established, however,
these practices became fixed principles. The colonists
Checking for Understanding
1. Define: pacifism.
2. Identify: English Civil War, Maryland
Toleration Act, Restoration, William
Penn, James Oglethorpe.
Reviewing Themes
3. Global Connections After the
Restoration, why did the English
government openly work to promote
additional colonization in North
America?
1. Interpreting Charts Which set of colonies had the
narrowest economic focus? Explain your answer.
2. Making Inferences Which set of colonies seemed
best equipped to settle the Americas most effectively?
became used to self-government and gradually came
to think of it as their right. Inadvertently, the English
government had planted the seeds of rebellion and
laid the foundation for what would eventually
become the United States of America.
Reading Check Explaining Why were South
Carolina and Georgia settled?
Critical Thinking
4. Analyzing How did the English Civil War
affect the English colonies in America?
5. Categorizing Use a graphic organizer
similar to the one below to list the reasons the colonies discussed in this section were founded.
Colony
New York
New Jersey
Pennsylvania
Reasons Founded
Analyzing Visuals
6. Analyzing Art Study the painting of
Oliver Cromwell on page 73. What
events led to Cromwell’s rise to power
in England?
Writing About History
7. Persuasive Writing Imagine that you
have been hired by the proprietors of
New Jersey to persuade settlers to
come there. Write an editorial for a
newspaper in England to convince
people to settle in New Jersey.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
77
N O T E B O O K
VERBATIM
“First, make thy will.”
ANONYMOUS,
opening of an “official” guide
to voyagers to the Americas
in the late sixteenth century
“
If I had thought you would
insult my gods, I would not have
shown them to you.
”
AZTEC RULER MONTEZUMA
TO CORTÉS,
after the Spanish erected a
cross in one of his temples
“
BROWN BROTHERS
Profile
JOHN WHITE, leader of the English settlers at Roanoke Island, returned
to England for supplies in the colony’s first year, leaving his family
behind. With the war against Spain being fought at home, it was three
years before he found passage back to Virginia. His ship was caught in
a Nor’easter trying to reach the shore.
At daybreak, we landed and we . . . proceeded to walk along the shore,
rounding the northern part of the island, until we came to the place
where we left our colony in the year 1586. . . . As we went inshore up
the sandy bank we saw a tree on the brow of a cliff curiously carved
with the clear Roman letters CRO.
We knew at once that these letters indicated the place to which the
planters had gone. Before I left them we had agreed on a secret token.
They were to write or carve on trees or doorposts the name of the place
where they had settled. . . .
The weather grew fouler and fouler. Our food supply was diminishing,
and we had lost our cask of fresh water. We therefore decided to
go . . . visit our countrymen in Virginia on the return trip.
[We] were entertained with all
love and kindness, and with as
much bounty, after their manner,
as they could possibly devise.
We found the people most gentle,
loving and faithful, void of all
guile and treason, and such as
lived after the manner of the
Golden Age.
”
COMMANDER ARTHUR BARLOW,
describing the people
of Roanoke Island
“
Once it happened that [the
Spaniards] used 800 of the
Indians instead of a team to draw
their carriages, as if they had
been mere beasts.
”
BARTOLOMÉ DE LAS CASAS,
Spanish landowner and priest who
argued against slavery and in favor of
fairness for Native Americans in his
book, The Tears of the Indians
“ ”
Forced worship stinks in God’s
nostrils.
ROGER WILLIAMS,
founder of Rhode Island, 1638
IT’S THE LAW
JAMESTOWN, 1619. All colonists are required to attend two divine services every
Sunday, and they must bring along “their pieces, swords, powder and shot.”
PLYMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS, 1639. The General Court of Massachusetts prohibits
the drinking of toasts. “The common custom of drinking to one another is a mere
useless ceremony and draweth on the abominable practice of drinking healths.”
NEW AMSTERDAM, 1658. Governor Peter Stuyvesant has prohibited tennis during
the time of divine services.
78
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
COLONIZING AMERICA: 1519–1732
Banned in Boston
Among the crimes for which colonists were punished in 1655 and 1656 were:
eavesdropping
pulling hair
drinking
scolding
profane dancing
tobacco smoking
neglect of work
uncharitableness
playing cards
meddling
bad grinding at a mill
delivering naughty speeches
pushing one’s wife
Milestones
NUMBERS
FORMED, 1570. THE IROQUOIS
LEAGUE, an alliance among
the Cayuga, Oneida, Seneca,
Mohawk, and Onandage tribes.
The goal is to avoid war by
settling differences in tribal
councils. Ohwichiras, women
heads of families, choose male
delegates to the League.
10 million
Subjects of Montezuma II,
the Aztec ruler in 1519
100 Rooms in
Montezuma’s palace
100 Baths in
Montezuma’s palace
INTRODUCED, 1630. THE FORK,
by John Winthrop, who brought
the utensil to America in a leather
case with a bodkin (dagger) and
knife. Queen Elizabeth made use
of the fork popular in England
despite the condemnation of
the practice by many clergy.
BETTMANN/CORBIS
SET SAIL, 1715. FIRST
WHALING EXPEDITION from
Nantucket, Massachusetts.
Spurred on by the capture of the
first sperm whale in 1711, the six
sloops returned home with cargo
yielding 600 barrels of oil and
11,000 pounds of bone.
Soldiers in Montezuma’s army
550 Soldiers in the
army of Hernán Cortés
1 year
Elapsed time between Cortés’s
arrival in Mexico and his
conquest of the Aztec
25.2 million
Estimated population of
Mexico in 1518
CONSECRATED, 1730. FIRST
JEWISH SYNAGOGUE, in New
York. A group of Sephardic Jews
who had fled the Inquisition in
Portuguese Brazil established the
congregation in New Amsterdam
in 1655.
NORTH WIND PICTURES
MISSING, 1687. THE
CONNECTICUT CHARTER, a
document establishing greater
self-governance for the colony.
Its principles are opposed by Sir
Edmund Andros, governor of
the Dominion of New England,
who demanded the charter
be surrendered. When the
Connecticut assembly reluctantly
displayed the document, the
candles mysteriously blew
out, and the charter vanished.
Informed sources hint it may be
found in the hollow of an oak tree.
200,000
Montezuma
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
79
Reviewing Key Terms
On a sheet of paper, use each of these terms in a sentence.
1. conquistador
10. joint-stock company
2. presidio
11. privateer
3. hidalgo
12. burgesses
4. encomienda
13. headright
5. hacienda
14. proprietary colony
6. vaquero
15. Separatist
7. Northwest Passage
16. Pilgrim
8. coureurs de bois
17. heretic
9. Puritan
18. pacifism
Reviewing Key Facts
19. Identify: Francisco Pizarro, John Cabot, Walter Raleigh,
William Bradford, Squanto, John Winthrop, Roger Williams,
Anne Hutchinson, Oliver Cromwell, Henry Hudson, William
Penn, James Oglethorpe.
20. Why were the Spanish able to defeat the Aztec and the Inca?
French Colonies
• Established to expand fur trade
• Colonization effort grew slowly
• Population of New France increased by
promotion of immigration
• Enslaved Africans imported to work
plantations in Louisiana
Spanish Colonies
• Established to gain wealth and spread
Christianity and European culture
• Structured society based on birth, income,
and education
• Economy dominated by mining and
ranching
80
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
21. What factors determined social class in the Spanish colonies?
22. What was the purpose of the Council of the Indies?
23. What role did Bartolomé de Las Casas play in reforming
Spain’s policies toward Native Americans?
24. How did the French treat the Native Americans?
25. How did joint-stock companies help colonize North America?
26. How did tobacco save the Jamestown colony?
27. What caused Roger Williams to leave Massachusetts and
found the town of Providence?
28. Why was Georgia founded?
Critical Thinking
29. Analyzing Themes: Cultures and Traditions How did the
relationships between Native Americans and the Spanish differ from those between Native Americans and the French?
30. Evaluating How were England’s royal colonies and proprietary colonies governed?
31. Identifying Cause and Effect How did the English Civil War
affect the English colonies in North America?
British Colonies
• Established as places to earn profits and to
practice religion freely
• Provided a place for the poor to start a new life
• Offered right to elect legislative assembly
• Used as sources of raw materials and
markets for British goods
Dutch Colonies
• Founded to make money in fur trade
• Settlers from many countries populated
New Netherland
• Need for laborers led to Dutch involvement
in slave trade
• Territory eventually surrendered to Britain
Settlement of the Colonies,
1587–1700
R.
HISTORY
NEW
ENGLAND
.L
NEW FRANCE
St
Visit the American Vision Web site at tav.glencoe.com
and click on Self-Check Quizzes—Chapter 2 to
assess your knowledge of chapter content.
ME.
(Part of MASS.)
aw
r en
ce
Self-Check Quiz
nt
eO
Lak
ari
Portsmouth
MASS.
Boston
Plymouth
Providence
N.Y.
Hartford
32. Categorizing Use a graphic organizer like this one to list the
reasons for English colonization in North America.
L
o
N.H.
R.I.
CONN.
New Haven
MIDDLE
COLONIES N.J. New Amsterdam
r ie
eE
ak
PA.
Reasons for
Colonization
DEL.
I AN
PA
LA
N.C.
City
Regional Boundary
S.C.
Settled by 1660
Charles Town
Settled by 1700
GA.
0
Savannah
35. Descriptive Writing The English colonies were founded for
various reasons. New governments in each of these colonies
offered incentives to new settlers. Pretend you have decided
to move from England to America. Write a letter to your family and friends explaining why you have chosen to settle in a
particular colony.
200 miles
200 kilometers
0
Albers Conic Equal-Area Projection
N
Chapter Activity
Writing Activity
E
S
80°W
34. American History Primary Source Document Library
CD-ROM Read “The German Settlements in Pennsylvania”
by Francis D. Pastorius, under Colonial America. Work with a
small group of your classmates to draw a plan of Germantown based on Pastorius’s description.
N
W
AP
33. Understanding the Parts of a Map Study the map of the
Great Migration on page 68. Then use the skills described on
that page to answer the following questions.
a. In what directions did English Puritans travel when they
migrated to New England and to the Bahamas?
b. Using the map labels, estimate the total number of
Puritan immigrants to the New World between the 1620s
and the 1640s.
ATLaNTIC
OCEaN
Williamsburg
Jamestown
VA.
MO
UNT
AIN
S
MD.
CH
Practicing Skills
70°W
Philadelphia
Baltimore
SOUTHERN
COLONIES
N
40°
Standardized
Test Practice
Directions: Choose the best answer to the
following question.
Which of the following is true about the early colonies of
Jamestown and Plymouth?
A Both colonies were started by people interested in establishing a new nation.
B Food shortages caused loss of life in both colonies.
C The primary source of income for both colonies was
tobacco.
Geography and History
D Both colonies were started by religious separatists.
36. The map on this page shows English colonial settlements.
Study the map and answer the questions below.
a. Interpreting Maps Which colonies had the most
territory by 1660?
b. Applying Geography Skills Along which natural
features had most of the colonies settled by 1700?
Test-Taking Tip: The important word in this question is
and. Look for an answer that applies to both colonies. For
example, while it is true that the Pilgrims founded Plymouth
Colony for religious reasons, the Jamestown founders were
primarily looking for gold and adventure.
CHAPTER 2
Colonizing America
81